Thursday, March 13, 2025

Thursday Tidbits

On a cool and cloudy Thursday, here are some things going on:

From National Review, Russia President Putin dismisses the Trump administration's proposal of a ceasefire with Ukraine and demands more concessions.

From FrontpageMag, actor Mel Gibson joins the effort to save California.

From Townhall, Senator John Kennedy (R-LA) gives his thoughts about whether the continuing resolution passed by the House of Representatives will pass in the Senate.

From The Washington Free Beacon, Illinois runs a scholarship program that excludes white applicants, which could get the state's leading universities defunded.

From the Washington Examiner, President Trump appears to have changed his mind about his plans for Gaza.

From The Federalist, the Environmental Protection Agency targets Obama-era regulations which allow climate zealots to hold America hostage.

From American Thinker, the Chief Twit is "the (un)masked magician's apprentice".

From MRCTV, a judge in Indiana appointed by Mr. Bill rules that a "trans" baby killer must be given transgender surgery at taxpayer expense.

From NewsBusters, co-hosts Joy Behar and Whoopi Goldberg of The View don't like it when their nonsense and hypocrisy are called out.

From Canada Free Press, a four-lane eight-mile-long highway under construction in the Brazilian Amazon region for the COP30 climate summit.

From TeleSUR, representatives of the indigenous Pataxó and Tupinambá peoples protest in front of the Brazilian Supreme Court building against a "timeframe law" and for the recognition of their lands.

From TCW Defending Freedom, the smug idealists who don't seem to notice the hundreds of thousands of dead bodies in Libya, Iraq and Syria.

From Snouts in the Trough, Trump Derangement Syndrome gets even worse.

From EuroNews, according to French Minister for European Affairs Benjamin Haddad, Europe needs to have its own weapons in order to control its security.

From ReMix, an Afghan man deported from Germany after being convicted of involvement in the drugging and rape of a 14-year-old girl seeks re-entry.

From Balkan Insight, Bulgaria's Constitutional Court rules that 17 current parliamentcritters were not legitimately elected.

From The North Africa Post, Libya resumes producing oil at the Mabruk field after a ten-year-long closure.

From The New Arab, Syrian interim President Ahmad al-Sharaa signs a constitutional declaration.

From The Jerusalem Post, a Gazan influencer allegedly raises $10 million for a fake charity.

From The Straits Times, police in Singapore warn about scammers posing as Ministry of Home Affairs officers.

From Tempo(dot)Co, Solo City, Indonesia plans to hold the longest-ever Ramadan iftar dinner.

From Free Malaysia Today, the owners of a cargo ship file a police report after some people allegedly broke into their storage facility in Port Klang, Malaysia and stole cars.

From the Borneo Post, Kota Kinabalu, Malaysia will get a modernized bus system.

From Vietnam Plus, hundreds of Vietnamese children with birth defects receive free surgeries at the Hue Central Hospital.

From the Taipei Times, according to a former military lawyer, Taiwanese President William Lai's proposal to reinstate military courts could be a boon.

From China News, China planted 4.446 million hectares of forest in 2024.

From Radio Free Asia, the U.S. hands over several Tibetan Buddhist relics to China.

From The Korea Herald, drones and robots are featured in a joint military drill by South Korea and the U.S. against North Korean WMD.

From The Mainichi, ceremonies in eastern Japan mark the anniversary of the earthquake and tsunami of March 11th, 2011.

From Japan Today, foreign visitors bring new life to nuclear disaster-hit Fukushima, Japan.

From Gatestone Institute, according to an American special envoy, Hamas wants peace.

From The Stream, Israel's claim to the West Bank is a biblical imperative.

From The Daily Signal, Wyoming Governor Mark Gordon (R) signs a bill that bans foreign influence in the state's elections.

From The American Conservative, Trump should not attempt any regime change in Ukraine.

From The Western Journal, a left-leaning polling organization which got the 2024 election very wrong announces its own shutdown.

From BizPac Review, Vice President Vance's shamrock socks steal the spotlight at a meeting between President Trump and Irish Taoiseach Micheál Martin.

From The Daily Wire, according to a study, the number of illegal aliens in the U.S. is a record 18.6 million.

From the Daily Caller, anti-Israel protesters occupy the lobby of the Trump Tower in New York City.

From the New York Post, beware the raccoons on Long Island.

From Breitbart, Trump looks to expand ICE's detention capacity for criminal illegal aliens.

From Newsmax, Small Business Administration administrator and former Senator (R-GA) Kelly Loeffler expresses optimism on the future of American manufacturing.

And from SFGate, Democrats need to wake the [bleep] up.

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